Coupled Glucose Transport and Metabolism in Cultured Neuronal Cells: Determination of the Rate-Limiting Step
Author(s) -
Richard R. Whitesell,
Michael P. Ward,
Anthony L. McCall,
Daryl K. Granner,
James M. May
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.167
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1559-7016
pISSN - 0271-678X
DOI - 10.1038/jcbfm.1995.102
Subject(s) - phosphorylation , hexokinase , extracellular , veratridine , glucose transporter , metabolism , biochemistry , intracellular , glucose uptake , biology , carbohydrate metabolism , efflux , biophysics , chemistry , glycolysis , sodium , endocrinology , sodium channel , insulin , organic chemistry
In brain and nerves the phosphorylation of glucose, rather than its transport, is generally considered the major rate-limiting step in metabolism. Since little is known regarding the kinetic coupling between these processes in neuronal tissues, we investigated the transport and phosphorylation of [2- 3 H]glucose in two neuronal cell models: a stable neuroblastoma cell line (NCB20), and a primary culture of isolated rat dorsal root ganglia cells. When transport and phosphorylation were measured in series, phosphorylation was the limiting step, because intracellular glucose concentrations were the same as those outside of cells, and because the apparent K m for glucose utilization was lower than expected for the transport step. However, the apparent K m was still severalfold higher than the K m of hexokinase I. When [2- 3 H]glucose efflux and phosphorylation were measured from the same intracellular glucose pool in a parallel assay, rates of glucose efflux were three- to-fivefold greater than rates of phosphorylation. With the parallel assay, we observed that activation of glucose utilization by the sodium channel blocker veratridine caused a selective increase in glucose phosphorylation and was without effect on glucose transport. In contrast to results with glucose, both cell types accumulated 2-deoxy-d-[ 14 C]glucose to concentrations severalfold greater than extracellular concentrations. We conclude from these studies that glucose utilization in neuronal cells is phosphorylation-limited, and that the coupling between transport and phosphorylation depends on the type of hexose used.
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